PC card and WLAN system having high speed, high resolution, digital-to analog converter with off-line sigma delta conversion and storage

ABSTRACT

A PC card and corresponding WLAN system having an improved DAC operable at higher speed than heretofore achievable which exploits the sigma-delta principle in a different way. More particularly, the invention comprises a PC card ( 302 ) and corresponding WLAN system ( 300 ) that implement a digital-to-analog conversion circuit ( 105 ) including a storage means ( 110 ), such as a read only memory, for storing delta-sigma analog sequences corresponding to all possible values of a digital input ( 106 ) coupled to a plurality of one-bit digital to analog converters ( 120, 122, 124, 126 ). Each of the digital-to-analog converters ( 120, 122, 124, 126 ) are clocked by multi-phase clocks, such that each phase applied to each one of the digital-to-analog converters ( 120, 122, 124, 126 ) is delayed with respect to one another by the oversampling period. An summer is coupled to each digital-to-analog converter ( 120, 122, 124, 126 ) for summing each output from each digital-to-analog converter ( 120, 122, 124, 126 ) to generate an analog output. Hereby, the digital-to-analog conversion circuit ( 105 ) according to the invention emulates a delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter having both high speed and high resolution.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This invention is related to copending applications: Ser. No. 09/846,846, filed Apr. 30, 2001; Ser. No. 09/846,440, filed Apr. 30, 2001; and Ser. No. 09/846,429, filed Apr. 30, 2001, all of which are herein incorporated by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION

This invention pertains to a PC card that can provide a computer with wireless communication capability and corresponding WLAN system that incorporate a digital-to-analog (D/A) converter for performing high speed and high-resolution digital-to-analog conversion using an oversampling principle.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Digital-to-analog conversion refers to the process of converting discrete digital signals into a continuous-time range of analog signals. The conversion of analog signals to digital signals and vice versa is often used in order to interface real world systems, many of which monitor continuously varying analog signals, with digital systems that read, store, interpret, manipulate and otherwise process the discrete values of sampled analog signals. Real world applications which use digital-to-analog converters (DACs) include, for example, digital audio systems such as compact disc players, digital video players, and various other high performance audio applications, which include conversion of digital signals to analog waveforms at a high resolution.

Sigma-delta modulation (sometimes called “delta-sigma modulation”) provides a high-resolution digital-to-analog conversion solution. Sigma-delta DACs have come into widespread use with the development of signal processing and digital audio technologies and their applications. Sigma-delta modulation incorporates a noise-shaping technique whereby the noise of a quantizer (often 1-bit) operating at a frequency much greater than the bandwidth is moved to high frequencies not of interest in the output signal. A filter after the quantizer removes the out-of-band noise. The resulting system synthesizes a high-resolution data converter, but is constructed from low-resolution building blocks. Since sigma-delta DACs provide for oversampling digital-to-analog conversion through the sampling of signals at very high frequencies (i.e., sampling at rates much greater than the Nyquist rate), high signal-to-noise ratios are achieved. Thus, the combination of oversampling and noise shaping technologies may be implemented using a sigma-delta DAC in order to achieve high resolution without external trimming. There, however, does not exist at present a digital-to-analog conversion solution that provides both high speed and high resolution. A good overview of the theory of sigma-delta modulation is given in “Oversampling Delta-Sigma Data Converters,” by Candy and Temes, IEEE Press, 1992. Examples of D/A converters utilizing delta-sigma modulation are given in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,901,077; 5,079,551; 5,185,102; 5,313,205; 5,701,106; 5,712,635; 5,786,779; 5,920,273; and 5,952,947. The disclosures of the foregoing references are incorporated herein by reference.

Specifically, sigma-delta DACs commonly include a front-end interpolator which receives digital input samples and increases the sampling rate (typically 64-256 times the input sample rate) of the digital input samples. The sigma-delta modulator receives the higher frequency input samples from the interpolator and converts the samples to a lower resolution (typical one-bit), high frequency bit stream. Rather than spreading quantization noise uniformly over the frequency range from 0 to the sampling Nyquist frequency, the sigma delta modulator shapes the noise so that the majority of the noise falls into the very high frequencies above the Nyquist frequency. Thus, it effectively removes the noise from the lower frequency range which is of interest for the particular applications cited above. Techniques for increasing the sample rate, generally called interpolation, are well understood by those skilled in the art. Most designs will utilize several stages of increase.

An oversampling DAC which utilizes a second order sigma-delta quantizer and an analog low pass filter to convert the data from the sigma-delta quantizer to analog signal is a very effective device for low speed audio applications; yet, inadequate for high speed applications. In addition, it has a relatively high output data transition rate, requiring higher power than is desirable. Moreover, considering oversampling interpolations on the order of n=256 for high sampling rates, such as the 400 M samples/sec required for cellular base station applications, extreme clocking speeds (400 MHz×256) become a serious design obstacle.

Thus, there exists a need for a PC card that can provide a computer with wireless communication capability and corresponding WLAN system having an improved DAC operable at higher speed than heretofore achievable which exploits the sigma-delta principle in a different way.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention comprises a PC card and corresponding WLAN system having an improved DAC operable at higher speed than heretofore achievable, which exploits the sigma-delta principle in a different way. More particularly, the invention comprises a PC card that can provide a computer with wireless communication capability and corresponding WLAN system that implement a digital-to-analog conversion circuit having a memory for storing delta-sigma bit sequences corresponding to all possible values of a digital input coupled to a plurality of one-bit digital to analog converters. Each of the digital-to-analog converters being clocked by multi-phase clocks such that each phase applied to each one of the digital to analog converter is delayed with respect to a next one by the oversampling period, which is the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples. An analog summer is coupled to all the digital-to-analog converters for summing all the outputs from the plurality of digital to analog converters to generate an analog output. Hereby, the digital-to-analog conversion circuit embodied in the wireless communications apparatus and corresponding system emulates a delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter having both high speed and high resolution.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

For a more complete understanding of the present invention and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like reference numbers indicate like features and wherein:

FIG. 1 is a schematic of a known first order sigma-delta converter;

FIG. 2 is a schematic of a known second order sigma-delta converter;

FIG. 3 shows a known over-sampling DAC system having the known first order sigma-delta converter of FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 illustrates the prior art digital signal processor and DAC arrangement;

FIG. 5 illustrates a first order sigma-delta converter coupled to a read only memory to program;

FIG. 6 illustrates an embodiment of a sigma-delta modulator as disclosed in one embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 7 shows the timing diagram of the clocking signals for each one-bit DAC in the sigma-delta modulator in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 8 displays a flow chart of the method of modulating a signal in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 9 illustrates a communications system that implements the sigma-delta modulator of one embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 10 illustrates a block diagram of a PC card implemented in an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 11 illustrates a PC card block diagram that implements the sigma-delta modulator according to an embodiment of the present invention; and

FIG. 12 illustrates a PC card block diagram that implements the sigma-delta modulator according to an embodiment of the present invention;

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The present invention is best understood by comparison with the prior art. Hence, this detailed description begins with a discussion of a well-known first order sigma-delta quantizer, as shown in FIG. 1. The purpose of this quantizer in a D/A converter is to convert a high-resolution digital signal x_(i), 11, having several bits (16, for example) into a single-bit code y_(i), 12, which can be accurately converted to analog. Input 11 is fed to the quantizer 21 via an integrator 16, and quantized output 12 is fed back as feedback 25 and subtracted using adder 14 from the input. Quantizer 21 generates a 1-bit output depending upon whether the output of the integrator is positive or negative. The quantizer function is modeled as adding the output of integrator 16 to an error signal e_(i) (not shown). This modeling allows the calculation of the spectrum of the noise to be done in a straightforward manner.

For large positive inputs, the integrator output will be positive. A logic one is then the output of the quantizer, which is fed back and subtracted from the input. The series of output ones continues until the integrator output, which is ramping down due to the negative feedback, finally crosses the quantizer threshold, at which point the quantizer outputs a negative one. Over time, the average output y_(i) equals the input x_(i). The system is called a first order sigma-delta converter, because a single integrator stage is used.

FIG. 2 shows a common second order sigma-delta quantizer. In many D/A conversion applications, sigma-delta modulators are chosen to be at least second order because higher order modulators better reduce noise in the signal band, due to improved prediction of the in-band quantization error. Thus, the resulting signal-to-noise ratio is better. Second order sigma-delta modulators are still relatively stable and easy to design. However, third and higher order modulator design can become quite complex.

For the quantizer of FIG. 2, input x_(i) 30, is added to feedback signal 42 by adder 32. The signal from adder 32 is fed into first accumulator 34. The output of accumulator 34 is fed into second accumulator 36. The output of accumulator 36 goes into quantizer 38. The residue or error signal e_(i) (not shown) is added to the input x_(i) by adder 32. Quantized output 38 also feeds back as feedback signal 42. Quantizer 38 may quantize the signal into ones and zeroes (1-bit format) or into multiple levels.

For simplicity, oversampling by repeating the input data at higher frequencies is considered. The analysis of a delta-sigma loop with constant input is simple. It can be assumed that the residue R output of the integrator 16 in FIG. 1 remains bounded to a small value (denoted by ε because of the negative feedback around the loop). The residue R is equal to the error in the input sequence x_(i) minus the output sequence y_(i), as follows:

Σ(x _(i) −y _(i))=R→ε

For n times oversampling using repetition of the input data n times between Nyquist samples, since x_(i) is constant for the n iterations, after n iterations of the loop, this error reduces to ε/n.

 ΣX _(i) −Σy _(i)=ε

nΣx−Σy _(i)=ε

x=(1/n)Σy _(i)+(1/n)ε

In a second order loop, there are two integrators in tandem. The input gets accumulated as x, 2x, 3x, . . . nx in the first integrator. In turn, the second integrator will contain as x, 3x, 6x, . . . n(n+1)x/2 due to the input samples alone. Thus, the error goes down in a quadratic fashion as 2/(n²+n).

ΣΣx _(i) −ΣΣy _(i)=ε

{n(n−1)/2}ΣΣx−ΣΣy _(i)=ε

x=(2/(n ² +n))ΣΣy _(i)+(2/(n ² +n))ε

In other words, by increasing the order of the loop or n, one can make the error negligibly small as the stored value grows in proportion to n.

As disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,815,102, which is incorporated by reference herein, FIG. 3 shows an oversampling D/A converter which utilizes a second order sigma-delta quantizer 70 and a one-bit D/A converter 71 as the demodulator 69, and a low pass filter 73 to remove the noise from the 1-bit signal. Oversampling is used to increase resolution by reducing quantization error to a small value. Techniques for increasing the sample rate, generally called interpolation, are well understood by those versed in the art. Typical techniques, among many, include zero stuffing and data repetition.

In FIG. 3, the input signal x_(i), 60, consists of data encoded into 16-bit words at 8 kHz. These words are placed into a register 63 from which they are fed into a low pass filter 64 at 32 kHz, with each word repeated four times. The low pass filter is of the finite impulse response type. The linear interpolator 66, which is also a low pass filter, inserts three new words between each pair of words from low pass filter 64, which raises the data rate to 128 kHz. These words are fed into a second register 67, which feeds each word into the demodulator 69, repeating each word eight times, resulting in a data rate of 1 MHz. This repeating of the samples is a simple type of low pass filter. The 1 MHz sample rate is a sufficiently high data rate for audio applications so that the quantization noise which will be introduced into the signal is small, and the requirements of the analog smoothing filter are easily met. Output y_(i), 61, is an analog signal. For audio applications, the output of demodulator 69 can sometimes be driven directly into a speaker, because the speaker can act as a low pass filter. This configuration uses what is called class D output or pulse density modulation drive. Power dissipation in a class D stage has the potential for being very low, as the output transistors are always in either a fully shorted or open position, removing most resistive power consumption.

An oversampling D/A converter like that of FIG. 3, which utilizes a second order sigma-delta quantizer 70, and a low pass filter 71 to convert the data from the sigma-delta quantizer 70 to analog signal y_(i), 61, is a very effective device for low speed sampling such as for low speed audio applications. However, it has a relatively high output data transition rate, requiring higher power than is desirable. Moreover, at high speed sampling rates, such as the, for example, 200 MHz sampling required for cellular base station applications, and oversampling interpolations on the order of n=256 times oversampling, extreme clocking speeds (400 MHz×256) becomes a serious design obstacle.

Oversampling may be achieved by any given interpolation procedure. For example, where over-sampling is performed on a sample which is held constant for a whole Nyquist period, the interpolation reduces to repeating the input sample value n-times where n is the oversampling ratio. A sample and hold operation results in a low-pass filtering function and this is the well known (sinX)/X function. FIG. 6 shows a known implementation using a digital signal processor 80 coupled to oversampling sigma-delta modulator 90. The digital signal processor calculates the sequence values with the incoming signal in real time and the sigma-delta converter operates at oversampling rate. This, however, turns out to be an unnecessary and power-hungry operation. TI-32956

FIG. 5 illustrates the apparatus used which provide off-line processing of output sequences in accordance with the present invention. A 16-bit input word is received by a sigma-delta converter 100 that is coupled to a read-only memory 110. The input signal and the output signal of the sigma-delta converter 100 are coupled to the read-only memory 110 to be stored as a table. In operation, sigma delta conversion pre-calculated off-line to generate the output sequence as well as residue if not negligible. This becomes possible since the conversion of one value of the signal is independent of the previous history of the inputs. Thus, the 65,536 values corresponding to all possible 16-bit inputs can be fed on a one-at-a-time basis into the off-line sigma delta converter. The converter runs for n cycles where n is the oversampling factor. The output sequence of n bits and residue obtained from this off-line computation are stored in a read-only memory 110 addressable by a 16-bit input word.

FIG. 6 displays a high speed, high-resolution digital-to-analog converter 105 in accordance with the present invention. A 16-bit input word at the input signal 106 addresses the read-only memory 110 of FIG. 5 that contains the pre-computed delta-sigma values corresponding to all possible 16-bit inputs. The values stored in the read-only memory 110 when addressed by the input signal 106 will output all the stored values of the sigma delta sequence simultaneously. The output can be converted to the required analog signal by using a plurality of one bit digital to analog converters (DACs) 120, 122, 124 and 126 coupled to the n outputs of ROM 110, each clocked by multi-phase clocks each delayed with respect to the next by the oversampling period. The data stored in ROM 110 is compressed if necessary to minimize the number of storage cells or size of the ROM 110. Depending upon what is stored in ROM 110, the data output from the ROM 110 may be in variety of useful, low transition rate formats.

Given a delay-lock loop and n one-bit DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126, when the memory is addressed by an input, the whole stored bit-sequence as well as the residue is transferred to the output simultaneously. The sequence is stored as a column, these bits are fed to the DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126 in parallel as shown. Each DAC 120, 122, 124 and 126 may be implemented using a current steering arrangement having a single differential pair and a tail current source. Each differential pair is switched by a clocked flip-flop thereby transferring current from one side to the other. The DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126 are clocked with delayed clocks shown in FIG. 7. The delay between adjacent clocks is the T/n where T is the Nyquist period. This multi-phase clock must be obtained using a delay-lock loop with very low jitter. For improved accuracy reasons, if stored residues are outputted, a separate residue adder 128 and DAC 130 will be necessary. These values will be added in the digital domain. Only when the value of the residue becomes appreciable (i.e. when the most significant bit becomes one) will it be converted to analog and added to the output as a correction.

The analog output obtained by summing all the DAC 120, 122, 124 and 126 outputs then emulates a sigma-delta DAC yet this embodiment provides both high speed and high resolution not possible by prior art sigma-delta solutions. Note that this output has shaped quantization-noise at high frequencies above the oversampling rate that must be filtered out. A convenient way to do this, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,012,245 (which is incorporated herein), is to use an FIR filtering technique which is obtained simply by adjusting the tail currents of the various DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126 to correspond to the coefficients of the filter. Multiplication is trivial when one of the operands is a +1, −1 or 0. Note that inaccuracies in coefficients of the filter will not introduce non-linearity or spurs but will only change the frequency response of the filter.

Another embodiment may include the incorporation of a second-order sigma-delta loop, to obtain 100 dB dynamic range, the oversampling ratio is 128. This means that the read-only store is 65K×128 bits. If a higher order loop or a multi-bit delay loop is utilized, the oversampling ratio will be smaller; however, the DAC 105 becomes more complex although the number of DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126 as well as the number of clock-phases reduces.

Still another embodiment may include an apparatus to apply the optimum number of taps and the tap weight coefficients of the filter. The method of designing the optimum number of taps and the tap weight coefficients as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,012,245 are incorporated herein. Specifically, these tap weight coefficients would be applied to the analog output signals from the DAC's 120, 122, 124 and 126.

Yet another embodiment may include a ROM such as the one in FIG. 5 where the data is compressed taking advantage of symmetry in the table and then stored. The data is later expanded by an expansion unit coupled to the output of the ROM after it leaves the ROM in FIG. 6. The corresponding expansion unit must be at a high speed as well.

A sub-assembly may be comprised solely of the ROM having the pre-stored sigma delta digital sequence for possible values of digital input.

A method of converting a digital signal to an analog signal having high speed and resolution is summarized in the flow chart of FIG. 8. At the start (step 200), sigma-delta analog sequence patterns are generated off-line for all possible digital signal inputs as shown in step 201. These sequence patterns are stored in a storage means such as a read-only memory in step 202. After a digital signal input addresses the read-only memory to retrieve the stored sequence pattern in step 203, the analog sequence pattern is retrieved in step 204. This data is applied to a plurality of digital-to-analog converters in step 205. In step 206, each of the plurality of digital-to-analog converters is clocked by a multiphase clock. All the outputs from each digital-to-analog converter are summed to present an output signal in step 207, which ends the process (step 208).

The high speed, high-resolution digital-to-analog converter of the present invention can be used in a variety of telecommunication and other applications. Conveniently, digital-to-analog converter 105 can be part of wireless LAN terminals and access points. FIG. 9 illustrates a WLAN (wireless local area network) in which the digital-to-analog converter of the present invention may be implemented. WLAN system 300 comprises a PC card 302 that provides wireless communication capability to a computer 303 to which it is coupled. PC card 302 facilitates wireless communication between a WLAN access point 304 and computer 303 (which may be a portable, desktop, work station, or any other similar computing device) via an uplink channel 306 and downlink channel 308. The WLAN access point and the PC card operate in a similar manner. The PC card may be embodied in an ISA or PCI card as used in a desktop computer or as a USB interface for PDAs, or MP3 players.

WLAN system 300 can be facilitated in Time Domain Duplex (TDD) or in Frequency Domain Duplex (FDD). In Time Domain Duplex (TDD) the communication between PC card 302 and WLAN access point 304 is on a single channel. Much like a walky-talky, the channel is shared in time by the mobile station transmitter and the access point transmitter. A time slot is dedicated to the uplink and another timeslot is dedicated to a downlink. The relative length of the uplink and downlink time slots can be adjusted to accommodate asymmetric data traffic. If it is found that downlink data traffic is on average twice that of uplink, then the downlink time slot is twice as long as the uplink time slot. In Frequency Domain Duplex (FDD) the PC card 302 and the WLAN access point 304 communicate over a pair of radio frequencies. The lower frequency is the uplink during which the PC card sends information to the access point. Both uplink and downlink are each composed of a signal source, a transmitter, the propagation path, a receiver and a method of presenting the information. Both PC card and WLAN access point embody the invention with transmitters, which convert digital data to analog signals at high speed and with high resolution. The WLAN access point could convert the entire multi-carrier downlink signal to analog for use in a single RF transmitter. The PC card is explained in the following.

FIG. 10 presents a top-level block diagram 309 of the PC card 302. In the PC card 302, radio frequency (RF) signals are received and transmitted by an RF section 312. In the embodiment illustrated, RF section 312 comprises a duplexer 335 (such as a switch) for coupling an antenna 305 to a receiver 317 and a power amplifier 323. A modulator 321 is coupled to power amplifier 323 and to a synthesizer 319 which itself is coupled to receiver 317. RF section 312 is further coupled to an RF interface 314. RF interface 314 is coupled to both receiver 317 and modulator 321 of RF section 312. The analog RF interface 314 includes I and Q analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) and analog-to-digital converters (DACs) for conversion between the digital and analog domains. RF interface is further coupled to a digital baseband 316.

In the illustrated embodiment, digital baseband 316 comprises four elements: interface 315 (which is further connected to a connector 307 that facilitates connection to computer 303), digital signal processor (DSP) 318, microcontroller unit (MCU) 320, and application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) 322. DSP 318 couples interface 315 to RF interface 314 and to microcontroller unit (MCU) 320. Digital signal processor (DSP) 318 and microcontroller unit (MCU) 320 are further coupled to ASIC backplane 322. The MCU can provide a user display, such as an LED which indicates data TX, data RX, carrier detect, etc.

The digital signal processor (DSP) 318, provides channel coding and decoding, equalization, demodulation and encryption. The microcontroller unit (MCU) handles level 2 & 3 protocol, radio resource management, short message services, man-machine interface and the real-time operating system. The ASIC backplane 322 performs all chip-rate processing. While top level diagram 309 illustrates RF section 312, RF interface 314 and digital baseband 316 as being separate packages or chips, the invention contemplates substitution of any of the above with an equivalent function, such as an RF function, and/or an RF interface function and/or a digital baseband function. The functions will remain the same even if the actual implementation varies. The invention further contemplates that RF section 312, RF interface 314, and digital baseband 316 may be selectively combined and/or integrated into one or two packages or chips.

An uplink voice processing chain 306 for a wireless local loop terminal 302 is illustrated in FIG. 11. This channel includes modulator 341 coupling DSP 343 to a digital-to-analog converter 325 at high speed and high resolution. An RF transmitter 334 (part of RF section 312) couples an antenna 338 to digital-to-analog converter 325. The data is input to the DSP for encryption. This signal is then complex modulated, converted to analog (I&Q), the present invention, and applied to the transmitter. The transmitter is complex modulated at the radio frequency assigned to the handset. It uses a power amplifier coupled to the antenna 338 to transmit the digital signal, effectively communicating the (digital) voice information to the access point receiver.

A downlink voice channel 308 for wireless user terminal 302 is illustrated in FIG. 12. This channel includes an RF receiver 340 (part of RF section 312) coupling antenna 338 to a sigma-delta analog-to-digital converter (ADC) 342, a DSP 343 coupling a demodulator 344 to a data port. The RF receiver uses an AGC circuit which varies the IF amplifier gain as a function of the received signal. The goal is to present the ADC with a full-scale analog signal without distortion and with minimal noise.

The band structure of the Wireless LAN system in which the communication system of the present invention operates is composed of several adjacent RF carriers with very high spectral density. As previously mentioned, using high speed, higher resolution digital-to-analog converters (DACs) disclosed in this invention, enables multi-carrier access point transmission through a common RF power amplifier.

The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow. 

What is claimed:
 1. A PC card having radio frequency (RF) communication capability, comprising: a digital baseband; an RF section; an RF interface coupling said digital baseband to said RF section, wherein said RF interface further comprises a delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter having a digital input and an analog output comprising: a storage means having stored outputs of a delta-sigma converter fed by a number of predetermined interpolated samples corresponding to all possible values of said digital input; said storage means coupled to receive said digital input; a plurality of digital-to-analog converters coupled to said storage means to receive said stored outputs, said plurality of digital-to-analog converters clocked by multi-phase clocks wherein each phase applied to each of said plurality of digital to analog converters is delayed with respect to a next one by an oversampling period equal to the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples; and a summer coupled to said plurality of digital-to-analog converters for summing all output from said plurality of digital-to-analog converters to generate said analog output.
 2. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said storage means is a read/write programmable memory.
 3. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said storage means is a read only memory.
 4. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said PC card is connectable to a computer.
 5. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said PC card is connectable to a personal digital assistant (PDA).
 6. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said PC card is connectable to a wireless MP3 player.
 7. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said digital baseband further comprises: a digital signal processor (DSP); a microcontroller unit (MCU) coupled to said DSP; an ASIC backplane coupled to said DSP and said MCU; and an interface for coupling an external data source to said digital signal processor (DSP).
 8. The PC card of claim 1 wherein said RF section comprises a duplexer coupling said receiver and to a power amplifier to an antenna.
 9. The PC card of claim 8 wherein said RF section further comprises a modulator coupling said RF interface to a power amplifier.
 10. The PC card of claim 9 wherein said RF section further comprises a synthesizer coupled to said modulator and to said receiver.
 11. The PC card of claim 9 wherein said delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter is located within said RF interface.
 12. A WLAN communications system, comprising: a WLAN access point; and a PC card coupled to a computer, said PC card being capable of communicating with said WLAN access point via radio frequency (RF) communication, said PC card further comprising: a digital baseband; an RF section; an RF interface coupling said digital baseband to said RF section, wherein said RF interface further comprises a delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter having a digital input and an analog output comprising: a storage means having stored outputs of a delta-sigma converter fed by a number of predetermined interpolated samples corresponding to all possible values of said digital input; said storage means coupled to receive said digital input; a plurality of digital-to-analog converters coupled to said storage means to receive said stored outputs, said plurality of digital-to-analog converters clocked by multi-phase clocks wherein each phase applied to each of said plurality of digital to analog converters is delayed with respect to a next one by an oversampling period equal to the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples; and a summer coupled to said plurality of digital-to-analog converters for summing all output from said plurality of digital-to-analog converters to generate said analog output.
 13. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said storage means is a read/write programmable memory.
 14. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said storage means is a read only memory.
 15. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said wireless LAN access point is a consumer premises equipment (CPE).
 16. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said digital baseband further comprises: a digital signal processor (DSP); a microcontroller unit (MCU) coupled to said DSP; an ASIC backplane coupled to said DSP and said MCU; and an interface for coupling an external computer to said digital signal processor (DSP).
 17. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said RF section comprises a duplexer coupling a receiver and a power amplifier to an antenna.
 18. The WLAN communications system of claim 17 wherein said RF section further comprises a modulator coupling a synthesizer to said power amplifier and said receiver coupled to said synthesizer.
 19. The WLAN communications system of claim 18 wherein an input of said modulator is coupled to an output of said RF interface and an output of said receiver is coupled to an input of said RF interface.
 20. The WLAN communications system of claim 12 wherein said delta-sigma digital-to-analog converter is located within said RF interface.
 21. A PC card, comprising: a digital baseband; an RF section; an RF interface coupling said digital baseband to said RF section, wherein said RF interface comprises: a storage means having stored compressed outputs of a delta-sigma converter fed by a number of predetermined interpolated samples corresponding to all possible values of said digital input; said storage means coupled to receive said digital input; an expansion unit coupled to said storage means for expanding said compressed outputs; a plurality of digital-to-analog converters coupled to said expansion unit to receive said expanded stored outputs, said plurality of digital-to-analog converters clocked by multi-phase clocks wherein each phase applied to each of said plurality of digital to analog converters is delayed with respect to a next one by an oversampling period equal to the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples; and a summer coupled to said plurality of digital-to-analog converters for summing all output from said plurality of digital-to-analog converters to generate said analog output.
 22. A PC card, comprising: circuitry for providing a digital baseband function; circuitry for providing an RF function; circuitry for providing an RF interface function, said circuitry for providing an RF interface function being coupled to said circuitry for providing a digital baseband function and said circuitry for providing an RF function, wherein said circuitry for providing an RF interface function comprises: a storage means having stored compressed outputs of a delta-sigma converter fed by a number of predetermined interpolated samples corresponding to all possible values of said digital input; said storage means coupled to receive said digital input; an expansion unit coupled to said storage means for expanding said compressed outputs; a plurality of digital-to-analog converters coupled to said expansion unit to receive said expanded stored outputs, said plurality of digital-to-analog converters clocked by multi-phase clocks wherein each phase applied to each of said plurality of digital to analog converters is delayed with respect to a next one by an oversampling period equal to the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples; and a summer coupled to said plurality of digital-to-analog converters for summing all output from said plurality of digital-to-analog converters to generate said analog output.
 23. A WLAN communications system, comprising: a WLAN access point; and a PC card coupled to a computer, said PC card being capable of communicating with said WLAN access point via radio frequency (RF) communication, said PC card further comprising: circuitry for providing a digital baseband function; circuitry for providing an RF function; circuitry for providing an RF interface function, said circuitry for providing an RF interface function being coupled to said circuitry for providing a digital baseband function and said circuitry for providing an RF function, wherein said circuitry for providing an RF interface function comprises: a storage means having stored compressed outputs of a delta-sigma converter fed by a number of predetermined interpolated samples corresponding to all possible values of said digital input; said storage means coupled to receive said digital input; an expansion unit coupled to said storage means for expanding said compressed outputs; a plurality of digital-to-analog converters coupled to said expansion unit to receive said expanded stored outputs, said plurality of digital-to-analog converters clocked by multi-phase clocks wherein each phase applied to each of said plurality of digital to analog converters is delayed with respect to a next one by an oversampling period equal to the Nyquist period divided by the number of predetermined interpolated samples; and a summer coupled to said plurality of digital-to-analog converters for summing all output from said plurality of digital-to-analog converters to generate said analog output. 